Fisheries:
The father of the deceased said on Wednesday when the alleged killer was acquitted by the Supreme Court in the murder of a 23 -year -old software engineer of Andhra Pradesh, he said on Wednesday that he would ‘leave it to God’. The Supreme Court on Tuesday acquitted Chandrabhan Sudam Sunap citing ‘big flaws’ in the prosecution case and said that the prosecution failed to prove its case in a concrete manner.
What is the whole matter?
Esther Anuhaya (23) was found dead on 16 January 2014 near Kanjur Marg. She returned to Mumbai after two weeks of Christmas and New Year holidays. She was working in TCS in Mumbai and was last seen exiting Lokmanya Tilak Terminus railway station.
Later, the Mumbai Police arrested Sunap for alleged rape and murder of Anuhaya. After the court hearing and conviction, he was sentenced to death, which was also upheld by the Bombay High Court. However, on Tuesday, the Supreme Court acquitted the sun in prosecution evidence, citing ‘big flaws’.
Now leave God
Anuha’s father S Jonathan Prasad told ‘PTI-Bhasha’, ‘What can we do? Actually, we did not even know what was happening. We do not even know that he (Sunap) has approached the Supreme Court. But what should we do? I leave it to God and whatever happens, I will not get my daughter back.
He said, ‘It was 10 years ago. What to say 10 years ago we felt that there would be some justice. Now it has completely changed. I do not know the reason. I again remembered my sad days of 10 years ago, how I had suffered in Mumbai. He said that he no longer wants to pursue this matter because he wants to spend peacefully on his last day.
Tired now
On the possibility of a reconsideration petition in the Supreme Court, he said, ‘No sir, I cannot do this. The problem is that I am over 70 age. It is difficult for me to move from my place. I am a retired person and my wife is not feeling well, she is a patient of diabetes. Therefore, I do not think I can file a petition at this age.
What did the court say?
Justice BR Gawai, Justice Prashant Kumar Mishra and Justice K.V. Vishwanathan’s three -member bench said that on the basis of available evidence, it would be extremely insecure to uphold the conviction against Chandrabhan Sudam Sunap.
What happened 10 years ago?
More than a decade ago, a 23 -year -old software engineer from Machilipatnam, Andhra Pradesh, returned to Mumbai on January 5, 2014 after a Christmas holiday and got off the train at Mumbai’s Lokmanya Tilak Terminus, where she was last seen alive. .
After several unsuccessful attempts to contact her on a mobile phone, the woman’s father lodged a missing report. After a deep discovery that lasted for about 10 days, a burnt body was found in a rotten condition in the bushes near the Eastern Express Highway in Kanjur Marg area.
Bypassing the Bombay High Court’s verdict, which maintains his conviction, the apex court said that the circumstances that have been connected together do not have the only hypothesis of being guilty of flax.
It states, “All facts force us to conclude that there are many flaws in the prosecution story, which leads to the conclusion that there is much more than what is seen in this case.” The bench said that the prosecution failed to prove their case beyond proper doubt.
(This news has not been edited by the Lokjanta team. It has been published directly from the syndicate feed.)